Hicks: Model says Kourtney Kardashian's son is his

A male model is threatening to take Kourtney Kardashian to court if she refuses to get her 3-year-old son a DNA test to prove that he's his father.

According to HollywoodLife.com, 10 months before Mason Disick was born on Dec. 14, 2009, Kardashian had split up with Mason's incredibly charming father, Scott Disick, and had a fling with model Michael Girgenti.

Ten months? Did someone miss their math and science classes?

The website supposedly spoke to a family lawyer in California, who said that if Girgenti moves ahead with the suit, and Kardashian ignores a court order to get her son tested, technically the court could find in favor of Girgenti and grant him parental rights.

Another family lawyer told the website that Kardashian wouldn't have a choice. She would have to submit Mason to the test.

While we're throwing around genetic tests, why not get one for all the Kardashians to see once and for all how many children O.J. Simpson really has?

No word on whether a suit has been filed yet, or what kind of mood Scott Disck is in this week.

WADE ROBSON DISCUSSES MOLESTATION ALLEGATIONS WITH MATT LAUER: Wade Robson said Michael Jackson molested him from the time he was 7 until he was 14, and the reason he's coming forward now isn't because of repressed memory, but because he was unable to acknowledge he was abused.

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The 30-year-old choreographer said on "Today" on Thursday that Jackson, who died in 2009, was "a pedophile and a child sexual abuser" and "performed sexual acts on me and forced me to perform sexual acts on him."

According to MSN.com, Robson was the first defense witness at Jackson's 2005 child molestation trial, where the singer was accused of molesting a 13-year-old cancer survivor. Robson insisted Jackson never sexually abused him.

Now his story has changed.

Robson wants a probate court to allow him to file a late creditor's claim against the Jackson estate -- the deadline has passed for creditors to file such claims. Robson was a dancing prodigy whose family came to the United States from Australia when he was 9. He appeared in three of Jackson's videos: "Black or White," "Jam," and "Heal the World." He later went on direct videos and do choreography for acts like N'Sync and Britney Spears. He also hosted "The Wade Robson Project" for MTV in 2003. Four years later, he joined FOX's "So You Think You Can Dance" as a judge and choreographer.

Robson told Matt Lauer he wasn't ready to face the truth until he became a father two years ago, and began wondering how he would feel if someone molested his son. "This is not a case of repressed memory," Robson said. "I have never forgotten one moment of what Michael did to me, but I was psychologically and emotionally completely unable and unwilling to understand that it was sexual abuse."

Robson said during the first criminal investigation of Jackson in 1993, when Robson was 11, Jackson would call "every day" to "role play" and convince him "both of us would go to jail for the rest of our lives" if anyone ever found out.

"It was complete manipulation (by Jackson) and brainwashing," said Robson. "He would role play and train me for these (trial) scenarios."

Howard Weitzman, a lawyer for Jackson's estate, issued a statement saying "Mr. Robson has adamantly denied under oath and in numerous interviews over the past 20 years that Michael Jackson ever did anything inappropriate to him. He now wants us to believe that he committed perjury at least twice and has been lying to anyone and everyone about Mr. Jackson since the early '90s so he can file a claim for money. Mr. Robson's transparent lawsuit comes nearly said years after Michael passed. His claim is outrageous and sad."

According to MSN, Robson said it's not about a payoff. "I've lived in silence and denial for 22 years and I can't spend another moment in that.... I'm never going to go away with this for the sake of money. I'm never going to be silenced for money. That's not going to happen."

IN MORE JACKSON FAMILY NEWS: Michael Jackson's nephew Taj Jackson, who is Tito's son, said Thursday he was molested as a child by a member of his mother's family, and that Michael consoled him.

According to TMZ, Jackson broke the news during a Twitter rant aimed at Wade Robson, who earlier this week accused Michael of molesting him when he was a child.

"That is how I KNOW Wade is lying. Because I AM a survivor," Jackson tweeted. Followed by: "I was sexually abuse (sic). By (a family member) on my mom's side of the family when I was a kid."

Jackson wrote that Michael "was a support system for me and my mom" during his abuse ordeal. He also tweeted a note Michael wrote his mother, saying "Dee Dee please read this article about child molestation and please read it to Taj (and his siblings) ... it brings out how even your own relatives can be molesters of children, even uncles or aunts molesting nephews or nieces. Please Read. Love MJ."

Taj Jackson said Robson is lying for money.

"What people will $ay and do for money and to $tay relevant is $ickening. De$perate times call for De$perate mea$ures. #Money."

You can stare at the calendar as long as you like, but it won't be April 1 for another 10½ months.

At Christie's in New York, an anonymous buyer paid $1.91 million for a painting of a steely-eyed Bea Arthur. A steely-eyed, naked from the waist up Bea Arthur.

Wow.

The imaginatively titled "Bea Arthur Naked" was painted by John Currin, who based his 1991 work on a fully clothed photo of the late actress.

"I had a vision in my head of Bea Arthur, and I found a picture of her," Currin has said, according to MSN.com. "I was going to put a scarf ensemble on her like that from her 'Maude' days, and I drew the body just to drape it. It was then that I realized that the painting was fantastic as it was. I loved being repelled by those two black eyes and falling back into these wonderful, soft breasts, which draw you back in."

Oh, man ... .

"I thought about the personae of the middle-aged women that were pictured in this series ("Golden Girls"), and I imagined them as being divorced and cast out, like harlequins wandering the beach. They are all self-portraits in a sense."

Great. Thanks.

Arthur, also known for her iconic portrayal of Maude on "All in the Family" and the spinoff, "Maude," died in 2009.

On its June cover, the magazine used the headline "Zoe Saldana: 115 Pounds of Grit and Heartache," for a story on Saldana. Some people were upset at the magazine's revelation, as if it was some sort of state secret. Others thought that saying how much the very-thin, 34-year-old Saldana weighs might be sending girls the wrong message about body weight. Others thought ... I'm not sure. I don't get any of this.

Saldana, who posed nude in the magazine, stands behind the headline. The "Star Trek Into Darkness" star talked about it Thursday on "Today."

"It would have been wrong if they were lying about my weight," she said. "This is how much I weigh. It's something I can't control. It's who I am. I have a very thin frame, I was a ballet dancer. They wanted to do that, I don't think it was to make an issue of my weight. I think it was to talk about that for a lightweight person, I seem to be really strong-minded."

There you go.

About the nude photo shoot, Saldana said, "I wanted to be bold and myself and be naked in a very symbolic way with my fans."

The actress also talked about the film and hinted at her supposed bisexuality.

Friday is May 17, the 137th day of 2013. There are 228 days left in the year.

1792: The New York Stock Exchange had its origins as a group of brokers met under a tree on Wall Street.

1912: The Socialist Party of America nominated Eugene V. Debs for president at its convention in Indianapolis.

1933: U.S. News & World Report had its beginnings as David Lawrence began publishing a weekly newspaper called United States News.

1938: Congress passed the Second Vinson Act, providing for a strengthened U.S. Navy.

1946: President Harry S. Truman seized control of the nation's railroads, delaying -- but not preventing -- a threatened strike by engineers and trainmen.

1954: The U.S. Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, unanimously struck down racially segregated public schools.

1961: Cuban leader Fidel Castro offered to release prisoners captured in the Bay of Pigs invasion in exchange for 500 bulldozers. (The prisoners were eventually freed in exchange for medical supplies.)

1971: "Godspell," a contemporary musical inspired by the Gospel According to St. Matthew, opened off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theatre.

1973: A special committee convened by the U.S. Senate began its televised hearings into the Watergate scandal.

1987: Thirty-seven American sailors were killed when an Iraqi warplane attacked the U.S. Navy frigate Stark in the Persian Gulf. (Iraq apologized for the attack, calling it a mistake, and paid more than $27 million in compensation.)

2003: A top Vatican official, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, acknowledged what many observers had long suspected -- that Pope John Paul II was suffering from Parkinson's disease. More than 260 people died in Sri Lanka's worst flooding in five decades. Funny Cide ran away from the field in the Preakness, two weeks after winning the Kentucky Derby. (However, Funny Cide came up short at the Belmont Stakes, finishing third.)

2008: Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., was flown to a Boston hospital after suffering a seizure at his Cape Cod home (he was later diagnosed with a cancerous brain tumor). Kentucky Derby winner Big Brown ran away with the Preakness (however, the horse's Triple Crown quest ended three weeks later when it finished last in the Belmont Stakes).

2012: Washington's envoy to Israel, Dan Shapiro, told the Israel Bar Association the U.S. had plans in place to attack Iran if necessary to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons. Donna Summer, 63, the "Queen of Disco," died in Naples, Fla. Frank Edward "Ed" Ray, the California school bus driver hailed as a hero for helping 26 students escape after three kidnappers buried them underground in 1976, died at age 91.